Q&A: Somalia's Terrorist Infestation 
By EBEN KAPLAN
http://www.nytimes.com/cfr/world/slot1_060106.html?pagewanted=print

>From the Council on Foreign Relations <http://www.cfr.org/> , June 1, 2006

Eben Kaplan is a writer for the Council on Foreign Relations website,
cfr.org <http://cfr.org/> .

Introduction 

Ever since the deaths of eighteen U.S. soldiers in a UN-backed intervention
in 1993, Somalia
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/so
malia/index.html?inline=nyt-geo>  has weighed on the minds of U.S.
officials. Without a functioning government since 1991, the country has been
home to a lawless society dominated by violence. Beyond the humanitarian
concerns caused by such prolonged instability, there is evidence to suggest
that international terrorist organizations are using the fractured state on
the tip of Africa's Horn as a safe haven and base of operations. According
to the U.S.
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/s/state_d
epartment/index.html?inline=nyt-org> State Department's most recent Country
Reports on Terrorism <http://www.cfr.org/publication/10554/> , terrorist
activities in Somalia are "threatening the security of the whole region."

What is Somalia's recent history? 

Somalia was created in 1960 by the merger of British Somaliland Protectorate
and the colony of Italian Somaliland. The United Republic of Somalia was
ruled by a democratic government for nine years until it was toppled by a
military coup and Major General Muhammad Siad Barre took power. Barre
established a socialist state, which lasted until 1991 when opposition clans
overthrew him. After Barre's expulsion, several northern clans declared
independence as the Republic of Somaliland. Though unrecognized, the area
has maintained a relatively stable existence under clan rule. In the south,
however, violence between rival warlords vying for power killed thousands of
civilians, prompting the UN Security Council to sponsor a U.S.-led
intervention. The mission ended shortly after a disastrous firefight in the
streets of Mogadishu led to unexpected U.S. losses. 

What efforts are being made to establish a government in Somalia? 

Since General Barre's flight from power, thirteen different attempts to form
a government have failed. A fourteenth effort, the product of two years of
thorough international mediation, produced a transitional government known
as the Somalia Transitional Federal Institutions (TFIs) in October 2004.
This includes a 275-member parliamentary body which elected a president, the
Ethiopian-backed warlord Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed. Experts say warlords are
members of the transitional parliament as well. Many of these warlords have
an interest in preventing the establishment of a stable government, as the
status quo enables them to maintain control over their fiefdoms. 

Actually convening the government has been no easy task. Until June 2005,
the TFIs existed in exile, and when they returned to Somalia several members
of the government faced assassination attempts. When the transitional
parliament finally convened on Somali soil in February 2006, they did so in
the city of Baidoa, in large part because meeting in Mogadishu, the capital,
was deemed too dangerous. Since then, renewed violence has caused experts to
question whether the TFIs can introduce any semblance of stability. 

International organizations have called for African Union peacekeepers to
help establish a stable environment in which a government could flourish.
Somali leaders have said they would welcome peacekeepers from Sudan and
Uganda, but not from Djibouti, Ethiopia, or Kenya, as they are concerned
their neighbors would be too eager to meddle in Somali affairs. 


Who holds the power in Somalia? 

After fifteen years of recurring violence and absent leadership, Somalia is
the very definition of a failed state. Providing a modicum of order in this
power vacuum are sharia <http://www.cfr.org/publication/8034/>  (Islamic
law) courts, which have sprung up across much of southern Somalia over the
past decade. More recently, these courts have obtained the support of
Islamist militias, which according to the UN dominate some 80 percent of
Mogadishu. Just prior to this year's transitional parliament meeting, a
group of Mogadishu-based warlords calling themselves the Alliance for the
Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism organized in opposition to the
militias. Clashes between the alliance and the Islamist militias escalated
in May 2006, resulting in some of the worst violence in Somalia in more than
a decade. Members of the transitional parliament have accused the United
States of supporting the allied warlords as part of the "war on terror."

What is the extent of the U.S. ties to the warlords of the Alliance for the
Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism? 

U.S. policymakers have not provided any information about their relationship
with the aligned group of warlords, but the Washington Post reports that
U.S.
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/16/AR200605160
1625.html?sub=AR> officials have anonymously confirmed contact with the
alliance. Some Somalis say the group's "counter-terrorism" name is just a
gimmick to attract U.S. support. As Ted Dagne, an Africa analyst for the
Congressional Research Service, explains, "The fact that these guys came up
with that alliance name five years after the terrorist attacks in New York
and Washington and considering their past and current brutal acts against
their own people should tell you something." 

The amount of U.S. support for the warlords, if any, is small. There are no
U.S. troops in Somalia, and an arms embargo forbids providing weapons.
Experts say the United States is likely communicating with the warlords and
possibly providing them with some money. Even this level of involvement has
caused some discontent within the TFIs. As Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gedi
told the Washington Post, "We would prefer that the U.S. work with the
transitional government and not with criminals." 


Why is Somalia an attractive location for terrorists? 

Members of several terrorist groups, including al-Qaeda, have sought refuge
in Somalia in recent years. The lack of a functioning central government
means Somalia's borders can be crossed without visas and once inside the
country, there's no real law enforcement to speak of. Just a boat ride away
from Yemen via well-traveled fishing and trade routes, Somalia has long
served as a passageway from Africa to the Middle East. 

The International Crisis Group (ICG) reports that despite repeated efforts,
militant Islam has failed to take root in Somalia's seemingly "fertile
ground." Nevertheless, Somalia is home to groups who are willing to offer
protection and support to terrorists transiting through the country. 


What terrorist groups are operating in Somalia? 

An ICG
<http://www.crisisgroup.org/library/documents/africa/horn_of_africa/095_coun
ter_terrorism_in_somalia.pdf> report (PDF) identifies two active terrorist
groups in Somalia. One is an al-Qaeda cell believed to be responsible for
the 1998 bombing of the U.S. embassy in Kenya, and later for the
simultaneous bombing of a Mombasa resort hotel and failed missile attack on
an Israeli passenger jet in 2002. Despite the high profile of this cell's
attacks, the ICG estimates the number of ranking al-Qaeda operatives in
Somalia is less than half a dozen. The second terrorist group, composed
largely of local jihadis, emerged in 2003 and has since carried out a number
of massacres and assassinations, including the murder of an Italian nun. Led
by Aden Hashi Ayro, who trained in Afghanistan, the group operates in
decentralized units and has no clear ideological agenda. Some members of
this new group, including Aryo, are former members of the now-defunct
al-Itihaad al-Islaami, a Somali terrorist group from the 1990s whose militia
once had more than 1,000 members, but was destroyed by Ethiopia after
attacks on Ethiopian territory. 

While terrorists have certainly taken advantage of Somalia's instability,
experts say the country is of particular concern not as much for the
terrorist haven it is today, but for the haven it has the potential to be.
As yet, Dagne says, "There is no evidence that I know of linking Somali
'Islamist' groups to any international terrorist act, although Somalia may
have been used as a transit for some terrorist individuals or a temporary
resting place, as is the case more so for Kenya." 


What is the United States doing to prevent terrorists from operating in
Somalia? 

Beyond the support the United States may or may not be giving the Alliance
for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism, there are some 1,000
U.S. troops stationed in nearby Djibouti as part of the Combined Joint Task
Force-Horn of  <http://www.hoa.centcom.mil/news.asp> Africa. This task force
is charged with advancing the long-term stability of the region--building
schools, hospitals, and wells--and preventing the spread of terrorism.
Djibouti is home to France's largest military base, and French forces are
also involved in development and counterterrorism operations. 

Experts agree the most effective counterterrorism strategy for Somalia is
one that seeks to establish a stable government, as well as an environment
in which civil society organizations and moderate Muslim organizations can
flourish. 



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